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Women appear in Australian newspapers waaaaay less than men

Depressing
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Heads up: itโ€™s 2016. We wanted to remind you because sometimes it can feel awfully like itโ€™s 1816.

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Case in point: research just out about the media.

A new study has examined the 13,000 news articles published in Australian media between August 2015 and July 2016, according to The Conversation. (The study looked at articles in The Age, The Australian, The Adelaide Advertiser, The Canberra Times, The Courier Mail, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Daily Telegraph, The West Australian, The Northern Territory News and The Hobart Mercury.) 

It found that the male pronoun โ€œheโ€ was the 16th most common word, overall.

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Depressingly, the word โ€œsheโ€ was much less common โ€“ just 66th on the list of common words. Overall, the word โ€œheโ€ was used 3.4 times more often than the word โ€œsheโ€, suggesting that we womenโ€™s voices are not being heard (or at least published) as much as those of men.

And it gets worse. 

The research, by Lancaster Universityโ€™s Corpus Approaches to Social Science Research Centre, also looked at the most common names used in the media. The number one most common name quoted in Australian media was Johnโ€ฆ. followed by David, Peter, and Michael. 

In fact, the 20 most common names found in the 13,000 articles were all men. The name โ€œJulieโ€ was the most commonly mentioned womanโ€™s name โ€“ and it came 21st.

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Which isnโ€™t depression at all. (Sob.)

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